North Korea threats timeline

North Korean People's Army soldiers march at the Kim Il Sung square in Pyongyang for the military parade to mark the 60th anniversary of the Workers' Party of Korea, 10 October 2005. Kim Jong Il, general secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea reviewed the military parade.
(AFP Photo / KCNA via Korean News Service)

The Korean Peninsula is experiencing a new period of high tensions, with both sides exchanging harsh rhetoric and promising retribution for any provocations. However, the roots of this conflict date back to the end of World War II in 1945.

Up until 1945 Korea remained under Japanese colonial rule but
after Japan surrendered to the Allied Powers, the land was divided
along the 38th parallel, with American forces staying to the to the
south of the demarcation line and Soviet troops to the north.

In 1948, two states were established on the peninsula: the Republic
of Korea (South Korea) and the Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea (North Korea).

As a result of political and military contradictions the Korean War
was sparked on June 25, 1950. South Korea was getting military aid
from the US and 15 other states, while the DPRK was backed by China
and the USSR.

On July 27, 1953 the conflicting sides signed a ceasefire
agreement. A peace treaty agreement however has never been signed,
so formally they have been in a state of war ever since.

The 60s were marked by repeated attacks and armed provocations by
both states, which led to the deaths of hundreds of Koreans.
Tensions were also stoked between Pyongyang and Washington in 1968
when an intelligence ship, USS Pueblo, was seized by North Korean
gunboats. In 1969 North Korea shot down a US reconnaissance plane
killing 31 Americans.

In the following decades, the North and South Koreas took steps to
ease tensions. Following secret negotiations on July 4, 1972, the
North and South even settled basic principles for reunification
without interference from foreign powers.

The 1980s were a period of relative calm which was punctuated by
two notorious incidents purportedly carried out by North Korean
agents.

In 1983, three senior South Korean politicians and 18 others
were killed in Rangoon, Burma, in a bomb attack targeting Chun
Doo-hwan, the fifth President of South Korea. One of the captured
bombers confessed to being a North Korean military officer.

In 1987, a bomb detonated mid-air on a Korean Air flight from
Baghdad to Seoul killing all 115 on board. The bombing, blamed on
North Korea placed the country on the US list of Designated State
Sponsors of Terrorism until 2008.

Although the incidents deeply strained relations between the two
states, in September 1990 the first high-level talks were held in
Seoul, and in December 1991 North and South Korea signed the
Agreement on Reconciliation, Non- aggression, Exchange and
Cooperation.

Also in 1991, both states joined the United Nations.

In 1992, North Korea agreed to allow the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) to inspect sites suspected of potential
nuclear weapons development. However, over the next two years
access to those sites was subsequently denied.

In 1994, Kim Il Sung, known as the "Great Leader"of the DPRK since 1948 died. His son, Kim
Jong-il, assumed power and was known as

"Dear Leader." North Korea subsequently agreed to freeze
its nuclear program in exchange for $5 billion worth of free fuel
and two nuclear reactors.

In 1996, during the severe famine that killed up to 3.5 million
people according to different estimations, Pyongyang threatened it
would scrap the armistice with the South.

In 1998, North Korea launched a rocket over Japan, which landed
in the Pacific Ocean. Pyongyang claimed it had successfully put a
satellite into orbit.

In June 2000, relations took a turn for the better when during
the first Inter-Korean Summit Kim Jong-il agreed to stop all
propaganda broadcasts against the South.

Tensions on the peninsula began to sour significantly in 2002,
after George W. Bush declared North Korea to be a part of the

“Axis of Evil.” In June of that year, North and South
Korean naval vessels clashed in the Yellow Sea, killing around 30
North and four South Korean sailors.

In October the United States stopped oil shipments to DPRK in
response to the country's secretive nuclear weapons program. The
DPRK responded by kicking out international nuclear inspectors and
reactivating its Yongbyon reactor.

In January 2003, the DPRK withdrew from the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), kicking off the ongoing nuclear
crisis. That July, Pyongyang announced it had enough plutonium to
start making nuclear bombs.

The following month, Six-party talks – South Korea, North Korea,
China, the US, Russia and Japan – kicked off in Beijing, though
Washington and Pyongyang failed to reach a consensus.

The next several years saw a series of failed negotiations, with
North Korea claiming to test its first nuclear weapon in October
2006.

But the following year, Six-nation talks resumed in Beijing,
with North Korea agreeing to close its main nuclear reactor in
exchange for fuel aid.

Relations with Seoul also somewhat thawed, with the two sides
signing a "Declaration on inter-Korean relations, peace and
prosperity" during the second Inter-Korean Summit.

The presidents of North and South Korea further promised to hold
talks to formally end the Korean War.

By 2008, relations once again soured between the two sides, and
in January 2009 Pyongyang said it would scrap all military and
political deals with the South.

Despite conciliatory gestures, North Korea’s alleged sinking of
a South Korean warship in March 2010 dramatically escalated
tensions.

In December 2011, Kim Jong-il died and his son Kim Jong-un was
named his successor.

The young North Korean leader quickly consolidated all the power
into his hands. To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the birth
of Kim Il Sung, in April 2012, Pyongyang launched a long-range
ballistic rocket The rocket fell into the sea.

In August 2012, ahead of the annual US-South Korean drills, Kim
Jong-un announced that the North Korean army was ready to deal

"deadly blows" in

“an all-out counter-offensive” in case the country’s
territory is violated or even a single shell falls on North Korean
soil.

A few months later North Korea announced to had developed
ballistic missiles capable of reaching the US mainland and then
revealed a plan to try again to send a satellite into space. The
launch took place on December 12 and prompted further UN sanctions
on the North.

In January 2013 North Korea announced it was planning a new
nuclear test, raising the confrontation with the US to a whole new
level.

On February 12, North Korea conducted its third nuclear test and
warned that further measures would follow if the US continued its
“hostility” against the North. The UN subsequently imposed
more sanctions on the county.

The rhetoric became even harsher in March with threats to launch
a pre-emptive nuclear strike against South Korea and the US. The
North further threatened to scrap the truce with the South and
nullify the joint declaration on denuclearization.

On March 29, following a mock bombing of North Korea by a US B-2
stealth bomber during a joint military drills, Pyongyang announced
that “the time has come to settle accounts with the US
imperialists” and ordered rocket units be put on standby to fire on
US bases in the South Pacific.

The following day, March 30, North Korea declared it was
entering a “state of
war” against its Southern neighbor, stating that from now on
any issues between the two countries would be resolved in a
"wartime manner."

Pyongyang also warned it would retaliate against any
provocations by the US and South Korea without "any prior
notice."

The decision by the US to deploy two nuclear-capable B-2 bombers
to participate in joint military drills with South Korea prompted
Pyongyang to harden its position in its long-term conflict with the
United States, North Korea's State News Agency said in a report
released on Saturday.

North Korean rocket units are reportedly on standby to fire on
US
bases in the South Pacific.

However, in the capital of Pyongyang, life was continuing
normally despite the declared state of war, Itar-Tass reported.
There was no observable mobilization of military forces in the
city, or any changes in troop deployments to foreign embassies.
Shops and restaurants remained open, and there were no
interruptions to the city’s public transportation system.

On April 1 the US upped the ante again by announcing deployment
of several F-22 stealth fighter jets to the Korean
peninsula. The advanced radar-evading F-22 Raptors were moved from
Kadena Air Base in Okinawa to the Osan Air Base, the main US base
in South Korea.